Charging schools which expel students could worsen an alarming rise in expulsion rates in Norfolk and have a damaging impact on children’s welfare, a principal has warned.

Mary Sparrow, from City Academy, Norwich said under pressure school leaders could be less inclined to invest money in measures to prevent students being expelled if they felt they could then face thousands of pounds in charges.

Speaking at a meeting of Norfolk County Council’s Schools Forum on Friday, she said “children should not be treated as numbers”.

Forum members were discussing the county council’s proposal to charge schools for permanently excluding pupils, an idea which the council hopes could tackle the county’s soaring expulsion rates and address a projected £8.5m overspend in special needs education.

The number of permanent exclusions around Norfolk leapt from 170 in 2013/14 to 195 in 2014/15 and 296 in 2015/16 with 137 children excluded in the autumn term alone this year.

“If a school clearly hasn’t done enough to prevent the expulsion, then fining them is fair enough.

“It is not black and white - there are many grey areas. Children should not be treated as numbers.”

Michael Bateman, head of Norfolk County Council’s Education Inclusion Service, said: “If there are cases where it is clear that schools are doing all they can but have no other choice, we can use discretion.”

Money raised from charges would be reinvested into reintegrating pupils.

Don't find the schools for having to "exclude" brats, fine or surcharge the parent(s) in order to recover some of the exceptional costs their "little darlings" have caused. Parents are being fined for taking their kids following unauthorised absences so there is precedence for such charges to be raised.